You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Under Heaven »

Book cover image of Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay

Authors: Guy Gavriel Kay
ISBN-13: 9780451463302, ISBN-10: 0451463307
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
Date Published: April 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Guy Gavriel Kay

Guy Gavriel Kay is an internationally bestselling and award- winning author. His works have been translated into twenty-five languages.

Book Synopsis

In his latest innovative novel, the award-winning author evokes the dazzling Tang Dynasty of 8th-century China in a story of honor and power.

Inspired by the glory and power of Tang dynasty China, Guy Gavriel Kay has created a masterpiece.

It begins simply. Shen Tai, son of an illustrious general serving the Emperor of Kitai, has spent two years honoring the memory of his late father by burying the bones of the dead from both armies at the site of one of his father's last great battles. In recognition of his labors and his filial piety, an unlikely source has sent him a dangerous gift: 250 Sardian horses.

You give a man one of the famed Sardian horses to reward him greatly. You give him four or five to exalt him above his fellows, propel him towards rank, and earn him jealousy, possibly mortal jealousy. Two hundred and fifty is an unthinkable gift, a gift to overwhelm an emperor.

Wisely, the gift comes with the stipulation that Tai must claim the horses in person. Otherwise he would probably be dead already...

The Barnes & Noble Review

To the short but piquant catalogue of perfumed, heady fantasies by Westerners set in an Oriental milieu -- those from Ernest Bramah, Barry Hughart, Liz Williams and E. Hoffman Price are prominent -- must now be added Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay.

Kay has set his novel in the empire of Kitai -- an accurate, albeit transmogrified stand-in for our historical China. The author has been publicly adamant about the superiority of imaginary venues over their realworld templates, using “the prism of fantasy to treat the matter of history,” and his hybrid mode generally repays the reader. Tangibility and verisimilitude abound, with a leavening of the supernatural and occult.

The hero of Under Heaven is one Shen Tai, a figure loosely modeled on the poet Li Po. Son of an important dead general, Shen Tai prefers verse and philosophy, although he is skilled enough for self-defense in the martial arts known as Kanlin. Having secluded himself from court politics for two years in the mountains, Shen Tai rejoins the world to find his beloved Spring Rain in the arms of another, a price on his head, and a gift of 250 rare horses attached to his name, more like a curse than a boon. (Recall Twain’s “The £1,000,000 Bank-Note.”) Accompanied by female bodyguard Wei Song, Shen Tai sets out for the capital of Xinan to reclaim his legacy.

This stately, elegaic, evocative tale, which alternates its sections among the prominent personages in Shen Tai’s life, is suffused mainly with a melancholy gravitas. Courtly politesse and Machiavellian politics abound. By the closing chapters, Shen Tai’s story has receded into legend, leaving the characters of this tragedy somewhat ghostly. What’s missing is the historical Li Po’s bawdy, carefree insouciance and adherence to art above all. Amidst the somber forests, battlefields and bloody palaces, the plotting and counter-plotting, some drunken, nose-thumbing irreverance might have played well, and bolstered Shen Tai’s stated adherence to a balanced spiritual path.

--Paul Di Filippo

Table of Contents

Subjects


 

 

« Previous Book Pearl of China
Next Book » Peony in Love